richarnold
Established Member
That about sums it up for me :lol:owenmcc":1fdlryr3 said:I had a go at one section of a handrail turn towards the end of college. It was somewhat restricted by the lecturers not having experience of the task, but after much discussion, geometry, setting out, drawing, head scratching the line that stood out in a book came at the end of an exhaustive chapter of handrailing (I'm sorry not to remember the source) was:
[paraphrase] "The master handrailer will sculpt the rail until it is right to eye and hand"
I also had the same experience at college over 30 years ago. over 2 weeks of technical drawing to produce two templates, then an afternoon in the workshop actually making it :?: I remember thinking at the time that if I ever had to do it again I would just get a block of wood and just hack it out by eye :lol: I have since had the pleasure of doing two contracts for clients that required handrail wreaths. One of them was well documented on this forum.handrail-wreath-update-t63489.html This second one was a little more complicated as I did not have a metal rail to follow this time so an upright cylinder was made that corresponded to the curve of the string, and the rise and go was plotted out on its face.
From this you can produce an elliptical template, which I used to mark out the vertical surface of the rail. This surface was then worked with draw knife, and spokeshave, until it fits the surface of the cylinder.
once one reference surface is achieved, the rest follow on without much trouble. I find it helpful to fix a piece of the finished rail section to both ends to give a guide. . I was useless at math's at school, but I don't think you really need all that knowledge to make wreaths, and I'm sure the craftsmen of the 18th and 19th century worked it out at the bench in much the same way.
So called thumb planes are very useful for forming the mouldings, but not that easy to come by. Most of them seem to be craftsman made. grinding profiles into old bits of hacksaw blade works well. Just use them as small hand held scratch stocks to tidy up the fine details.
Cheers Richard